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worst -- 's the worst performing equity market across the globe. investors are very nervous about this political of people that has been taking place this month. manus: talking about angela merkel, with some pictures at the start of the show arriving in turkey. this refugee deal is critical, isn't it? do we expect some kind of rapprochement, or re-stabilization of the agreement? what can we expect? reporter: angela merkel is here to attend the u.n. humanitarian summit. she will also be meeting with the president later today. her main mission is to make sure hat the eu-turkey-refugee deal does not fall apart. they say turkey is dragging its feet to give visa free travel to turkish citizens. they also want speedy delivery of the 6 billion euros promised. germany, for its part, is concerned about the grip of power. also, turkey lifting the community of kurdish lawmakers. it is going to be important to see what comes out of the meeting later today. manus: executive producer in istanbul, with the latest on merkel merkel's journey to istanbul. anna: the u.s. economy should be strong eno

worst -- 's the worst performing equity market across the globe. investors are very nervous about this political of people that has been taking place this month. manus: talking about angela merkel, with some pictures at the start of the show arriving in turkey. this refugee deal is critical, isn't it? do we expect some kind of rapprochement, or re-stabilization of the agreement? what can we expect? reporter: angela merkel is here to attend the u.n. humanitarian summit. she will also be meeting...

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lost their edge over stocks stagnating in the second quarter.thes&p 500has returned over 2%. let us bring in our guest. the senior advisor at credit suisse. bob parker is here. coming into the u.k. market later today after we heard from janet yellen on friday, do you think what she said on friday begs the question of when and not if? during the third quarter and probably july, we will see the next bed rate increase. i would be surprised if we saw it in june. month'swe need another wea to confirm the uptrend have seen in the u.s. economy in april and may after a weak first quarter. a very mediocre performance. january and february data were poor. as we go into june and july i think the data will improve. particularly, we could see todline unemployment down 4.7% at the end of september confirming the just -- confirming justifying the fed raising rates by 25 basis points. with the prospect of another 25 basis points at the end of the year. manus: that is exactly what i was going to ask you. what is the propensity for this said to stretch out more -- for this fed to stretch out more?

lost their edge over stocks stagnating in the second quarter. the s&p 500 has returned over 2%. let us bring in our guest. the senior advisor at credit suisse. bob parker is here. coming into the u.k. market later today after we heard from janet yellen on friday, do you think what she said on friday begs the question of when and not if? during the third quarter and probably july, we will see the next bed rate increase. i would be surprised if we saw it in june. month'swe need another wea...

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into the 30's but down from here. the drop as we saw is a closed market. amplify each other's moves. we are coming to a very quiet period. so, that is going back. think they are worried that before that happens, they back off a bit. anna: all things to keep in mind. the finance ministers will convene in brussels to discuss the proposed 11 billion euros in aid and debt relief measures, including increasing loans and decreasing rates. european creditors will also join the ministers to wrangle over the belief for grreceece, urging for the most drastic measures. let's get your thoughts on this story. for the first time in a long time, echoing the words we heard from the dutch finance minister, this is the first time the eurozone finance ministers are going to talk about greek debt "seriously." we are talking about a real change in this conversation. saker: when we were talking brussels greek crisis, was demanding it was too harsh and there was to be some renegotiation. those show they are willing to take it. the great prime minister has done that. at this stage, they have to realize the

into the 30's but down from here. the drop as we saw is a closed market. amplify each other's moves. we are coming to a very quiet period. so, that is going back. think they are worried that before that happens, they back off a bit. anna: all things to keep in mind. the finance ministers will convene in brussels to discuss the proposed 11 billion euros in aid and debt relief measures, including increasing loans and decreasing rates. european creditors will also join the ministers to wrangle...

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that they buy. manus: your demographic is rising and it is shifting more toward your 60's, doing these joint ventures, very appealing. it takes more than that to turn the dial in terms of getting people into those stores. what else are you going to do apart from those banner headlines? helen: we have over 32 million customers. it is hard to argue that they are all -- we have a wide variety of different customers. it is about the right design, style and price. it is about the execution and store. it is about mickey show we have the right displays so customers making sure we have the right displays so customers can find what they're looking for. when customers come in the can find it product they are looking for in the size that they want. anna: how much is it going to cost to get the clothing offering and marks & spencer? how much are you going to spend in getting this right? helen: as i said, what we are doing is taking the margin benefits and reinvesting those back into price. it will take time. the other thing we will be investing in his store stocks. the reason it takes time i

that they buy. manus: your demographic is rising and it is shifting more toward your 60's, doing these joint ventures, very appealing. it takes more than that to turn the dial in terms of getting people into those stores. what else are you going to do apart from those banner headlines? helen: we have over 32 million customers. it is hard to argue that they are all -- we have a wide variety of different customers. it is about the right design, style and price. it is about the execution and...

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you see that as sustainable? chris: i think oil will be raised now, between the high 20's and $55. really stand back and think about oil, it is been in a boom and bubble for 10 years. and the other side of that is not nearly back to where you were before. you have to unwind still excessive applied. anna: we have the government warning a specific about $100 oil again. chris watling, ceo and chief market strategist at longview, staying on the program longer. here are highlights for your david at 9:30 u.k. time, we get spurs quarter gdp data for the economy. and james bullard delivers a presentation to the official monetary institution for him and singapore. that is at 10 past 11:00 u.k. time. and we get u.s. durable good nor numbers, suggesting they will be more interesting than normal giving the strength of the data coming out of the u.s. right now. and half an hour later, we will get russia updating us on the gold and foreign exchange. of next on the program, the recipe for a rate hike, as said president kaplan says the u.s. job market and job growth are rising ingredient for the

you see that as sustainable? chris: i think oil will be raised now, between the high 20's and $55. really stand back and think about oil, it is been in a boom and bubble for 10 years. and the other side of that is not nearly back to where you were before. you have to unwind still excessive applied. anna: we have the government warning a specific about $100 oil again. chris watling, ceo and chief market strategist at longview, staying on the program longer. here are highlights for your david at...

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since the 1960's. -- is hoping that he will portsome access to the big during the vietnam war. he is negotiating with the philippines about getting access to bases that we are throwing when ito 25 years ago was a correspondent in asia. we never thought we would have access to it again. he's already got a > deal with the australians having access to darwin. what he is hoping to do is keep american forces engaged in new places around the south china sea where they are constantly going to be in china's space. charlie: is there a specific message to the chinese that if you go this far, we will respond , both the united states and its allies? david: the message is little more subtle. each of these countries recognized a need to have a relationship with china. the trade relationship they have with china is bigger than the trade relationship they have with the u.s., in many cases, and it's part of why the timedent spent so much making the case for the transpacific partnership, needs to be case made with congress. more so than the 11 asian nations the u.s. has negotiated with. fair to say th

since the 1960's. -- is hoping that he will portsome access to the big during the vietnam war. he is negotiating with the philippines about getting access to bases that we are throwing when ito 25 years ago was a correspondent in asia. we never thought we would have access to it again. he's already got a > deal with the australians having access to darwin. what he is hoping to do is keep american forces engaged in new places around the south china sea where they are constantly going to be...

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is high in their 20's and that a bottom 747 which is called having teenage children and that arises. older look at the world in a happier way. they look at the happy faces that all of the bad faces. age and you certain accept to you are. to figure out where it's all heading. we have the resources now you're ready to take the big risks. you got the stability. schaeuble is going to you taking risks? david brooks: i hope so. i messed up big time with not knowing trump was coming. when something like that happens using a look at yourself and you say when i miss about america? i am too much in the eastern corridor. that is one thing. charlie rose: from boston to new york to washington. rather than farms and factories. they do brooks: i travel every week but i'm always inside the bubble. i have achieved far more career success that i thought. so it's time to take some chances in the personal and emotional realm. i have nothing to lose. rose: taking chances in the spiritual realm. what is that mean? friendrooks: i had a .hat i went to summer camp with he was exuberance personified. he coul

is high in their 20's and that a bottom 747 which is called having teenage children and that arises. older look at the world in a happier way. they look at the happy faces that all of the bad faces. age and you certain accept to you are. to figure out where it's all heading. we have the resources now you're ready to take the big risks. you got the stability. schaeuble is going to you taking risks? david brooks: i hope so. i messed up big time with not knowing trump was coming. when something...

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emerging internet of things. ♪ consistently inconsistent.thes&p hasalternated between daily gains and losses for seven straight russians. -- sessions. bayer remains confident it can take over monsanto after its initial bid was rejected. is the drugmaker in danger of overpaid -- overpaying? vonnie: could this be the beginning of the end to greece's recession? ♪ david: welcome to the second hour of bloomberg . i'm david weston here with jonathan ferro and vonnie quinn. jonathan: we will head to the bloomberg breakaway conference in new york and speak with the chairman of cisco, john chambers. big moneympany sees in the emerging internet of things. vonnie: we will keep you up-to-date with all the market moves across globe. jonathan: futures here hire. s&p 500 futures positive. the ftse pushing higher by .6. the dax surging. the biggest two day pop since april. euro is nowhere to be seen. i will go straight to abigail doolittle. abigail: we are watching shares of tiffany and express down sharply in the premarket. have retail companies joined the graveyard of retail companies to be h

emerging internet of things. ♪ consistently inconsistent. the s&p has alternated between daily gains and losses for seven straight russians. -- sessions. bayer remains confident it can take over monsanto after its initial bid was rejected. is the drugmaker in danger of overpaid -- overpaying? vonnie: could this be the beginning of the end to greece's recession? ♪ david: welcome to the second hour of bloomberg . i'm david weston here with jonathan ferro and vonnie quinn. jonathan: we...

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position for a number of months. those factors should continue to cap it in the 50's. who reallyanything from opec this week? it is difficult to see saudi giving much. iran is not going to step back either. opec -- i am not sure he will be there. we should be in the early 50's. angie: thank you so much. --ing up, to counter looks takata rose up bankruptcy and looks for a buyer. ♪ angie: takata is said to have ruled out bankruptcy. the company is seeking buyers to take a controlling stake instead to inject funding. let's examine this with our auto editor in tokyo. what is their top priority here? they recognize their responsibility is first and foremost to supply replacement airbags to clean up the mess they have caused with these recalls. a big role that being played by their competitors. they have replacement airbags using inflator is from companies like trw here in japan, but takata is still supplying replacement kits. that is an important process for them to stick to. it is something the regulators , they cannot along skirt that responsibility. regardless of what happ

position for a number of months. those factors should continue to cap it in the 50's. who reallyanything from opec this week? it is difficult to see saudi giving much. iran is not going to step back either. opec -- i am not sure he will be there. we should be in the early 50's. angie: thank you so much. --ing up, to counter looks takata rose up bankruptcy and looks for a buyer. ♪ angie: takata is said to have ruled out bankruptcy. the company is seeking buyers to take a controlling stake...

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know what we had in terms of what we got from our parents. which is the ideal 1950's upbringing was pretty good. it's what i had. i feel extremely fortunate that i did. charlie: were you born with the ability to write? michael: no. writing is painful, no matter how long or how little you have been at it. charlie: let's turn a little politics. one word sticks out in your definition of donald trump, "phony." michael: does anyone want to challenge that? charlie: he would. he won all those primaries. he was voted by citizens of the united states. michael: yes. it's distressing, because it suggests there is a larger gap than people previously thought. charlie: this is not just some -- what do you think? michael: i am looking forward to voting against him. charlie: you think he will flame out? michael: yes. people say how exciting this campaign is going to be. i think the excitement is over. charlie: just his nomination, her nomination. michael: the convention will be entertaining. charlie: if you had a choice to vote between bernie sanders and hillary clinton, which would you vote for? m

know what we had in terms of what we got from our parents. which is the ideal 1950's upbringing was pretty good. it's what i had. i feel extremely fortunate that i did. charlie: were you born with the ability to write? michael: no. writing is painful, no matter how long or how little you have been at it. charlie: let's turn a little politics. one word sticks out in your definition of donald trump, "phony." michael: does anyone want to challenge that? charlie: he would. he won all...

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. charlie: so was the president. 's party was not. -- his party was not. john: we will see. charlie: the likely candidate for the democratic party is not. john: that is what we say today. in general there has been bipartisan support for trade. charlie: what happened? john: i don't know. i don't think we have done a good job, by we i mean business and in politics we have not done what we can to show americans the benefits of free trade. the administration i support them on trade. the administration has supported and affirmed that hydraulic fracturing can be done safely. there are some positives. i will say, right now, charlie: the ministration is against the pipeline. have beent now there some decisions -- there are a lot of relations at businesses right now. charlie: give me an example. john: and oil control rule in the gulf of mexico. we have put in 100 new practices in the last five years to improve drilling safety. with very little engagement with industry, they rushed new provisions. methane regulations. the cost of these methane regulations is disproportionate to the benefit at any

. charlie: so was the president. 's party was not. -- his party was not. john: we will see. charlie: the likely candidate for the democratic party is not. john: that is what we say today. in general there has been bipartisan support for trade. charlie: what happened? john: i don't know. i don't think we have done a good job, by we i mean business and in politics we have not done what we can to show americans the benefits of free trade. the administration i support them on trade. the...

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as good or better? julian: no, i didn't. i was lucky enough to win the prize when i was in my 60's. had i won in my 30's, it might have put more pressure on me. but i have written 20 books. i know what i am and what i do. charlie: and you know your audience. julian: i do and i don't. it is nice that different books find different readers. some books work in some places and others in other places. i tend not to write the same sort of book. though it shares themes, as you said, of memory and truth. it is a very different locale from the book that won the booker price. charlie: here is what some of the critics have said. this comes from "the sunday times." somber, poignant. blooming with intelligence and flair, this elegantly composed fictionalized meditation offers a fresh glance on a musical genius's collisions and collisions with power. julian: thank you for reading that. charlie: well, they said it, so i didn't make it up. idea is that -- the idea is that we can hardly imagine what it is like. the sacrifices this great musician had to make. julian: i think that is certainly true.

as good or better? julian: no, i didn't. i was lucky enough to win the prize when i was in my 60's. had i won in my 30's, it might have put more pressure on me. but i have written 20 books. i know what i am and what i do. charlie: and you know your audience. julian: i do and i don't. it is nice that different books find different readers. some books work in some places and others in other places. i tend not to write the same sort of book. though it shares themes, as you said, of memory and...

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late 1960's, early 1970's. my dad was prolific and specific about how he felt regarding dr. king and it influenced how i felt about him. he always said -- anyone could say that they lead men but only men -- only a man can lead men. dr. king was radical. he was not passive. he was not the type of leader that sat back and waited for the fight to come to him. charlie: he died fighting for the poor. mr. mackie: he did. i always call dr. king the unforgivable socialist. because nowadays, that word is buton to any politician back then, dr. king really believed in a community coming together to help each other. you make a community garden to feed the neighborhood. that is something that as a community we have gotten away from and now, it is my garden, mallard, my house in this community. charlie: what did you think you had to do to portray dr. king? mr. mackie: for me, -- you see the trailer and bryan cranston looks exactly like lbj and he portrays him spot on from the lbj that you see in people talk about. i felt was a man who was more known by his actions and his looks. for me, it was mor

late 1960's, early 1970's. my dad was prolific and specific about how he felt regarding dr. king and it influenced how i felt about him. he always said -- anyone could say that they lead men but only men -- only a man can lead men. dr. king was radical. he was not passive. he was not the type of leader that sat back and waited for the fight to come to him. charlie: he died fighting for the poor. mr. mackie: he did. i always call dr. king the unforgivable socialist. because nowadays, that word...

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"all the way." the "hollywood reporter" calls the film a fast-movingportraits, mackies,-- write plays king with authority and soul. here is the trailer for "all the way." [video clip] anthony mackie: i keep having this dream. a comanche war party searches the house. it is only a matter of time before they call me up to where their knives gleam. >> he's gone. the president? >> an accidental president, that's what they will say. >> i urge you to enact president kennedy's civil rights bill into law. >> that ain't going to be easy, dr. king. >> we will have to hold his feet to the fire. >> we in the senate intent to filibuster this bill. >> if you get in my way, i will crush you. >> this civil rights bill just killed your election chances. government does not do what is right, this will no longer be an option. >> is that a threat? ♪ >> everybody wants power. they think it ought to be given out, free of charge like mardi gras beads. nothing comes free, nothing. >> do you think everyone will suddenly start dancing to your tune? >> all we are asking is to live as decent human beings.

"all the way." the "hollywood reporter" calls the film a fast-moving portrait s, mackies, -- write plays king with authority and soul. here is the trailer for "all the way." [video clip] anthony mackie: i keep having this dream. a comanche war party searches the house. it is only a matter of time before they call me up to where their knives gleam. >> he's gone. the president? >> an accidental president, that's what they will say. >> i urge you to...

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the general election campaign, bringing up things from the 90's. some of those ugly political chapters that many people have forgotten or shelved. charlie: what does that say about donald trump to you? bob: what it says to me about trump is that this is a candidate who sees the general election, and victory on the horizon, but believes he has to battle to get there. he needs to bring up things that are not part of normal political conversation. i asked him about the 1993 death of vince foster to see where he was on that, and he said it was very suspicious. he called it very fishy. he said he will not make a central case in his campaign about it, but it is striking we have a republican nominee, a major party nominee who edges toward consideration some of these things. charlie: these kinds of opinions are held by roger stone and others, but not the vast majority of the political community. bob: they are not. you're exactly right. and the republican party, talking to consultants in washington, are already uncomfortable. but they sense trump has a strategy. it is not so much to ha

the general election campaign, bringing up things from the 90's. some of those ugly political chapters that many people have forgotten or shelved. charlie: what does that say about donald trump to you? bob: what it says to me about trump is that this is a candidate who sees the general election, and victory on the horizon, but believes he has to battle to get there. he needs to bring up things that are not part of normal political conversation. i asked him about the 1993 death of vince foster...

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nonstop in my 20's and part of my 30's until i said i know this but where are my characters. i was starting to worry about that and i changed that rhythm. wait before a chip became a mother. i was ending up with no time to prepare those characters, to explore who they are. that's the part of the process that makes me more happy. i want to play this person and let's have the time to breathe it and see who this person is. in mama i worked with a lot of cancer patients and doctors and i needed a few months to do that. charlie: what did you learn in that preparation? >> i learned so much about the movie, these fighters, these women, and their strength. how hard andt cruel the illness is, but emotionally what they go through. they showed me their scars on their bodies, they shared everything with me. for me this movie is for them. jon: and a much to all of them? my to all ofnd all that -- an homage to all of them. >> we talked about the roles and then it picked up and you won the oscar and you live in the dreadful star >> yes but i only have good memories from that. i was really young a

nonstop in my 20's and part of my 30's until i said i know this but where are my characters. i was starting to worry about that and i changed that rhythm. wait before a chip became a mother. i was ending up with no time to prepare those characters, to explore who they are. that's the part of the process that makes me more happy. i want to play this person and let's have the time to breathe it and see who this person is. in mama i worked with a lot of cancer patients and doctors and i needed a...

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safer. i got to 60 minutes at the end of the 80's. steve kroft and i joined together. i was fortunate enough to get on morley safer's team. rose: much has been said about his capacity to put words to pictures. the tradition at cbs news which starts with fred friendly and and romero is just the opposite. words for the year. writing for the year. -- for the year. ear. pedro's desk in london. it meant so much to him. he was naturally gifted as a writer. incredible command of the language. he took it to another place on 60 minutes. year butiting for the also to the picture. at 60 minutes he created that adventureswhimsical in his voice which was so unique. what about the combination when harry reasoner went to abc and morley safer went to join mike? jeff: that was tough. very different mindsets. that is where don to its brilliance comes in. i don't think what don predicted, the feistiness that would follow. from the get-go mike tried to steal everything morley wanted to do. and he did. he really did steal stories. morley once asked mike you threatened by out there? mike said no. you are n

safer. i got to 60 minutes at the end of the 80's. steve kroft and i joined together. i was fortunate enough to get on morley safer's team. rose: much has been said about his capacity to put words to pictures. the tradition at cbs news which starts with fred friendly and and romero is just the opposite. words for the year. writing for the year. -- for the year. ear. pedro's desk in london. it meant so much to him. he was naturally gifted as a writer. incredible command of the language. he took...

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was in my 60's. had i won in my 30's, it might have put more pressure. i have written 20 books. i know what i am and what i do. charlie: and you know your audience. i don't. do and it is nice different books find different readers. some books work in some places and others in other places. i tend not to write the same sort of book. though it shares themes, as you said, of memory and truth. it is a very different locale from the book that won the book of prize. ooker price. charlie: somber, poignant. this elegantly composed fictionalized meditation offers a fresh glance on a musical andus's collisions collisions with power. julian: thank you for reading that. charlie: they said it. i didn't make it up. the idea is we can hardly imagine what it is like. the sacrifices this great musician had to make. julian: i think that is certainly true. is too easy to say, i might have done differently in defense of my art. julian: that is one of the themes. it is easy when we look at a different regime in a different time to say, he should have done this or that. different.have been behaveimagin

was in my 60's. had i won in my 30's, it might have put more pressure. i have written 20 books. i know what i am and what i do. charlie: and you know your audience. i don't. do and it is nice different books find different readers. some books work in some places and others in other places. i tend not to write the same sort of book. though it shares themes, as you said, of memory and truth. it is a very different locale from the book that won the book of prize. ooker price. charlie: somber,...

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edition of wadr, i love the 90's. glaxo wellcome, you've got mail -- e, you got mail. john: talk to the hand, sports fans. on this time traveling, 2k,owback episode, forget y we're talking about donald trump and his rhetoric over bill clinton. it is now as quitting his personal attacks on hillary clinton by dredging up 20-year-old allegations of sexual misconduct. womeneased audio from two who accused pope and and of sexual assault years ago. also, other conspiracy theorists are calling the suicide of the vince foster "very fishy." he says people continue to bring it up because they think it is absolutely a martyr. this is of course not the first time trump has released these suspicions. its not a comedic gave him much attention in the last 24 hours, right? >> he is bringing forward allegations against former president bill clinton. >> it features the voice of monica lewinsky. also providing conspiracy theories about the vince foster, saying there could be foul play. x he is going all the way back to the 90's in order to escalate his personal attacks against bill clinton. not hillar

edition of wadr, i love the 90's. glaxo wellcome, you've got mail -- e, you got mail. john: talk to the hand, sports fans. on this time traveling, 2k,owback episode, forget y we're talking about donald trump and his rhetoric over bill clinton. it is now as quitting his personal attacks on hillary clinton by dredging up 20-year-old allegations of sexual misconduct. womeneased audio from two who accused pope and and of sexual assault years ago. also, other conspiracy theorists are calling the...

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until the mid-20 20's and after that, we are back to conventional oil. we based on what we know, have 10 or 12 years going from where we are and after that, i think the declines will come in and we are back to the old story of conventional oil. talk about the convention. it all sort of went wrong, didn't it? that of course is responsible for where we are partly now. you suggested the saudi's had no choice but to do that. why? >> let's say the saudi decided to stabilize the price in 2014. u.s. production would have gone in 2016.ased it would have brought in 2 million barrels a day of the u.s. production into the market. their choice was either to cut or $7 millionsix or let the market go. their policy was to decide size matters. for their survival, they have to be the number one most important player in the world. their point of view, i totally understand. if i were them, i would do exactly the same thing. suggesting their role is not to maximize profits but they have other regional aspirations as well. >> absolutely. they are a global player and they want to stay a global player. if y

until the mid-20 20's and after that, we are back to conventional oil. we based on what we know, have 10 or 12 years going from where we are and after that, i think the declines will come in and we are back to the old story of conventional oil. talk about the convention. it all sort of went wrong, didn't it? that of course is responsible for where we are partly now. you suggested the saudi's had no choice but to do that. why? >> let's say the saudi decided to stabilize the price in 2014....

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fell in love with jobs with crude prices. the dow closed1%,s&p downalmost that amount. we have a higher u.s. index up 0.6%, but the asia index was lower. so that is pretty much with the future is pointing to, mixed reaction coming from markets in this part of the world today. new zealand has opened first, down by 0.3%. price,an get the share it will be up 0.4%. ainn terra has maintained four year earnings forecast of 4551 -- $45 a share. ands also confirmed up dividends with june 7. we will be watching a lot of those commodities players coming through today. metals rising on the london metal exchange and global oil prices, even though they fell on friday, were up in the week. we are awaiting data in japan come forwardwill with first quarter pay numbers as well. looking at crude prices, this is the branch, up 5.4% over the course of last week. if we look at the u.s. contract for today, it was a little 0.2%, $46.28. angie: thank you. we'll watch japanese banking stocks after the first of the nation's biggest blunders released -- lenders release their forecast. they are predicting e

fell in love with jobs with crude prices. the dow closed 1%, s&p down almost that amount. we have a higher u.s. index up 0.6%, but the asia index was lower. so that is pretty much with the future is pointing to, mixed reaction coming from markets in this part of the world today. new zealand has opened first, down by 0.3%. price,an get the share it will be up 0.4%. ainn terra has maintained four year earnings forecast of 4551 -- $45 a share. ands also confirmed up dividends with june 7. we...

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the london bureau which was always a special place. i was there in the mid-1980's. morley would come through and work with his brother. those two did so much together. they traveled the world together. they spent so much time together. they weren't blood brothers, but it was a brilliant team. i always thought wouldn't it be amazing to someday work with morley safer. i got to 60 minutes at the end of the 80's. steve kroft and i joined together. i was fortunate enough to get on morley safer's team. charlie: much has been said about his capacity to put words to pictures. jeff: the tradition at cbs news which starts with fred friendly and edward r. murrow is just the opposite. words for the ear. writing for the ear. he got murrow's desk in london. it meant so much to him. he was naturally gifted as a writer. incredible command of the language. he took it to another place on 60 minutes. he was writing for the ear but also to the picture. at 60 minutes he created that genre, the whimsical adventures in his voice which was so unique. charlie: what about the combination when harry reasoner w

the london bureau which was always a special place. i was there in the mid-1980's. morley would come through and work with his brother. those two did so much together. they traveled the world together. they spent so much time together. they weren't blood brothers, but it was a brilliant team. i always thought wouldn't it be amazing to someday work with morley safer. i got to 60 minutes at the end of the 80's. steve kroft and i joined together. i was fortunate enough to get on morley safer's...

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that the aussie will be falling in the second half of the year towards low 70's, $.71. angie: all about the dollars. sean callow, thanks for that, live out of sydney. coming up, losing gains for one japanese gaining company? why the gung ho stock may take a hit. ♪ angie: welcome to the stock exchange, looking at the open in japan, south korea, and australia. we have reporters telling us what we are looking at. haidi: i am looking at gun how online, they make gains for apps, internet, including the apparently very popular puzzles and dragons game. 41 million downloads. not a longgie: weekend for us. little bit. [speaking simultaneously] haidi: you have got to play a little bit. this stock is a very poorly today while they are underperforming, japanese market down. it also announced first quarter earnings which has been terrible with 40% when it comes to operating down. net income also 30% down. shares lower than scheduled. this has quite an impact anduding a new puzzles dragons game out on nintendo at the end of july. i'm expecting given the downside for the market. >> is all fun

that the aussie will be falling in the second half of the year towards low 70's, $.71. angie: all about the dollars. sean callow, thanks for that, live out of sydney. coming up, losing gains for one japanese gaining company? why the gung ho stock may take a hit. ♪ angie: welcome to the stock exchange, looking at the open in japan, south korea, and australia. we have reporters telling us what we are looking at. haidi: i am looking at gun how online, they make gains for apps, internet,...

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was this? 25 years ago? >> yes, in the early 90's. you're quite ao cover something it happened in the early 90's, 25 years ago -- you're going to cover something that happened in the early 90's, 25 years ago? donald trumpe is talking about it. people have been talking about this and right next to my golf club, it is just a few minutes away and people have been talking about that for years. i have no idea what is going on. it is a bombshell. there is no doubt about it. clinton has not publicly responded to the bombshell but the clinton foundation responded that "the peace misleads readers about how the foundation works." and here is bill clinton talking about it last night on a rope line in kentucky. clinton: i haven't had a chance to read it carefully, but that is not what my foundation stands for. sodonny -- so donny, neither of these stories have exploded like i thought they would, but would you say that either or both represent a threat to the targets? ironically, they are both on brand and with trump, it is about this voice, and with hillary clinton, it is about e-mails. potential

was this? 25 years ago? >> yes, in the early 90's. you're quite ao cover something it happened in the early 90's, 25 years ago -- you're going to cover something that happened in the early 90's, 25 years ago? donald trumpe is talking about it. people have been talking about this and right next to my golf club, it is just a few minutes away and people have been talking about that for years. i have no idea what is going on. it is a bombshell. there is no doubt about it. clinton has not...

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trade so far for india, mumbai up i-19's of 1%. the topics are largely -- 9/10 of 1%. the topics are largely negative. the hang seng losing ground as well. in the middle east, about two hours away from the opening of the markets in the emirates, dubai, and other dobby. this is what we saw in the last section. dubai finishing out the session on tuesday, i don't want to say in decline, up 3/10 of 1%. looking at what is going on in down, nearlyally 2/10 of 1%. manus. manus: lovely, rich. if they focus on the rally in the u.s. or if we look at the price of oil. meantime, there are other stories making headlines. the yvonne man has special news. yvonne: donald trump has won the west virginia and the brassica primaries, a week after driving his competitors out of the race. ted cruz's name was still on the ballot in nebraska, and he hinted he might reenter the contest if he performs well. bernie sanders won west virginia, his 19th state victory. he has just 37 delegates up for grabs. president -- the brazilian president is facing what may be her last day in office. entering an impeachment t

trade so far for india, mumbai up i-19's of 1%. the topics are largely -- 9/10 of 1%. the topics are largely negative. the hang seng losing ground as well. in the middle east, about two hours away from the opening of the markets in the emirates, dubai, and other dobby. this is what we saw in the last section. dubai finishing out the session on tuesday, i don't want to say in decline, up 3/10 of 1%. looking at what is going on in down, nearlyally 2/10 of 1%. manus. manus: lovely, rich. if they...

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japan is lifting the regional iindex. it is still in negative territory and that is nowit'ss10thsession of losses. a lot to show you some of the stocks we have been watching. 6.4%e out of china at six in april. it is listed in hong kong which is being sold off, but toyota has received a good boost in tokyo. commodity prices has been in quite a lot of -- this is impacting the oil miners in sydney today. anna: thank you very much. manus? attention's turn our still to the part of the world. we will talk about china. consumer prices continue to rise. it was a healthy pace despite trading. narrowed morehat than expected. that go to stephen engle. i cut up with the chief global economist for s&p global and he said he didn't get some hard from these numbers. stephen: you have seen in the slowing economy, a firming of inflation. chinese officials, they hate and reflation. -- inflation. it is still well below the government target of 3% for the full year but it is at 3.3% for three straight months. coming from a low of 1.3% in october. now at 2.3% for three straight months. commodity pri

japan is lifting the regional iindex. it is still in negative territory and that is now it's s 10th session of losses. a lot to show you some of the stocks we have been watching. 6.4%e out of china at six in april. it is listed in hong kong which is being sold off, but toyota has received a good boost in tokyo. commodity prices has been in quite a lot of -- this is impacting the oil miners in sydney today. anna: thank you very much. manus? attention's turn our still to the part of the world....

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1980's and 1990's, filing for bankruptcy. we had news in march that the company was looking to possibly sell and restructure itself. those talks came to nothing. this came after a rough fourth quarter as well, a rough his goal position the company was in, years of losses. this is what we have at the moment. sales down 6.7%, probably the last straw. the straw that broke the camel's back. manus. manus: thank you very much. let's return to the chief executive officer of gulf capital. we were trying to squeeze some news. let's go back to this conversation. i know you have done the deal. i want to try to get a sense of what is on the agenda for you, and what interests me is this. a lot of the sovereign wealth funds are under a little bit more pressure. do you think we will see more ipo's coming from those? are there going to be opportunities for selling that you might be interested in? guest: i would say a lot of assets are for sale, nothing is off the table. if the crown jewel is being lifted, you can assume assets are going to come. it is definitely a buyers market, and we expect

1980's and 1990's, filing for bankruptcy. we had news in march that the company was looking to possibly sell and restructure itself. those talks came to nothing. this came after a rough fourth quarter as well, a rough his goal position the company was in, years of losses. this is what we have at the moment. sales down 6.7%, probably the last straw. the straw that broke the camel's back. manus. manus: thank you very much. let's return to the chief executive officer of gulf capital. we were...

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is brexit. right.'s it was interesting because it seems like the issue of brexit was thrown into the policy communication in the 11th hour. the draft thursday night, brexit was not even listed. the g-7 leaders seem to be backing david cameron when it comes to rallying support for the remain team. caemeron mention this agreement about these talks between japan and europe and how pressing to the case that the u.k. should stay in the e.u. a potential $7 billion for the british economy a year. it goes to show the u.k. is better off in the e.u. prime minister karen: i have never been -- prime minister cameron: -- pressure about getting the right result, getting, reforming europe -- it is in britain's national interest. that is what it is all about. p.m. having a good week here. he also got the support from leaders when it came to dealing with china's steel output, this expert they say has been fueled by government subsidies and support. they did not single out shine on directly but the references are evident. francine: at the g-7 summit in japan. let's introduce our guest, an investment o

is brexit. right.'s it was interesting because it seems like the issue of brexit was thrown into the policy communication in the 11th hour. the draft thursday night, brexit was not even listed. the g-7 leaders seem to be backing david cameron when it comes to rallying support for the remain team. caemeron mention this agreement about these talks between japan and europe and how pressing to the case that the u.k. should stay in the e.u. a potential $7 billion for the british economy a year. it...

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: welcome back. we have the first word. >>thinks.sandgrowth slowed in april, down from march. the steel and coal output dragged on production and estimates came in short. wealth fund will seek to join a class action suit against volkswagen. compiled, theyta are acting to safeguard. the interest rate hike associated with the brexit vote ahead of the election. the cbi cut the growth forecast and the referendum has put a dark cloud of uncertainty over the outlook. the mayor of manchester has an the last game of the football season. they say the package found devicethe match was a left during an earlier security exercise. the news is powered by our bureaus around the world. you can find more stories. host: thank you very much. the latest stories. the stocks have rebounded. we have a little bit more detail and a yield curve. >> thank you. we have the chinese data and disappointed data. not too much of the estimates. there is the delayed sales tax increase. we saw it fall to a two-month low and they have erased some of those slightly. year yield,t the 10 this could be cause for concerns in ch

: welcome back. we have the first word. >> thinks. s and growth slowed in april, down from march. the steel and coal output dragged on production and estimates came in short. wealth fund will seek to join a class action suit against volkswagen. compiled, theyta are acting to safeguard. the interest rate hike associated with the brexit vote ahead of the election. the cbi cut the growth forecast and the referendum has put a dark cloud of uncertainty over the outlook. the mayor of manchester...

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: could this guy stand on the same stage? there are some talented baseball 's,yers in the single and aa but it's totally different at the major level. mark: people will start googling him now. if you are someone like mitt , you want someone youon are proud to vote for. this guy, you could be proud to vote for him. you could say, this is a true conservative, a guy served in the military with an outstanding resume. but he his someone that -- is he someone. donald trump that -- trumpsomeone that donald could be worried about? john: we do not want to be dismissive of this person. who don'tver-trumpers look at the idea of sitting out the election -- like the idea of sitting out the election and want to cast a vote for someone, you can imagine somebody like him. money --he can't raise the chances he could get on the ballot. he is going to have to raise money. significantlyd up financial support. was is yowho kristol talking about. john: gary johnson and bl wells are more likely to be a factor on the election. two guys who have run states. those guys are much more likely to have an effect o

: could this guy stand on the same stage? there are some talented baseball 's,yers in the single and aa but it's totally different at the major level. mark: people will start googling him now. if you are someone like mitt , you want someone youon are proud to vote for. this guy, you could be proud to vote for him. you could say, this is a true conservative, a guy served in the military with an outstanding resume. but he his someone that -- is he someone. donald trump that -- trumpsomeone that...

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the american dream. he is in his mid-40's, making $300,000 a year. he gets my cancer. he's bewildered. because he does not have the access i do to have the experts. but if you go online, the mayo clinic has a great line. all the great cancer centers do. his health-care plan is probably one of the key finances as a businessman. it does not begin to cover the cost. these are the difficult things we have to deal with. charlie: you also say that either you have cancer or you do not. it is two different worlds. if you do not have cancer, you can be sympathetic. but if you do have cancer, you can be empathetic. tom: when a member of your family has cancer, everybody has cancer, in a manner of speaking. and i do not mean that in the darkest possible terms. the concentration is on that cancer. you see firsthand what they are going through. for the rest of us, we hear a friend has cancer, we are not there when they wake up in the morning or when they take their medication or are incapacitated. and we are not there for the moments of fear. and we see them three months later and they

the american dream. he is in his mid-40's, making $300,000 a year. he gets my cancer. he's bewildered. because he does not have the access i do to have the experts. but if you go online, the mayo clinic has a great line. all the great cancer centers do. his health-care plan is probably one of the key finances as a businessman. it does not begin to cover the cost. these are the difficult things we have to deal with. charlie: you also say that either you have cancer or you do not. it is two...

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husband did a heck of a job creating jobs back in the 1990's. mark: as we know from a remarkable new york times story --patrick haley, trump press plans to bring back the infidelities with the world watching. hillary clinton is now talking about her husband on the trail. how is bill clinton's role shaping up as a factor? mark: she raised this economy there were tremors all over the place. other people thought it was weird. today such a specific claim and almost offer him a job. i think it hangs in the balance. bill clinton has proved he can walk through negative stories. when he was a candidate, when he was president. when he is out there, he is not very high profile. donald trump up with him front and center. hillary control have the response. trump will say you are not the victim, you are a co-conspirator . how will clinton handle it? people around bill clinton are worried. i would say terrified they -- he will not handle this well. and trump will be a master of psy ops. willie: trump made the point you just made in the new york times story, which is that you cannot just go out and thro

husband did a heck of a job creating jobs back in the 1990's. mark: as we know from a remarkable new york times story --patrick haley, trump press plans to bring back the infidelities with the world watching. hillary clinton is now talking about her husband on the trail. how is bill clinton's role shaping up as a factor? mark: she raised this economy there were tremors all over the place. other people thought it was weird. today such a specific claim and almost offer him a job. i think it...

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company is set to debut on wednesday, after raising more than $1 billion. 's new and existing shares in asia's second biggest ipo this year. -- asia's second-biggest ipo this year. there was a default by one mdb in april. fei company is being investigated around the world for alleged money-laundering. db consistently denied wrongdoing. shares in virgin australia are searching at the open on the asx after the airline announced that china's would take a 30% stake. let's go to paul. what are the details? paul: it has been called a strategic alliance. is h and dayhat buying a 13% stake in virgin. 139 million us trillion dollars worth of new shares. they are paying $.30 per share for those. it is going to give them a sizable chunk of virgin australia. they intend to expand that over the coming years to about a 20% stake. hna full also be invited to nominate a director to the board. the deal is still pending. timemes at an interesting with air new zealand saying in march he wanted to get out of their stake in virgin currently holding about 26%. we do have virgin shares up, very healthy, 5.3%

company is set to debut on wednesday, after raising more than $1 billion. 's new and existing shares in asia's second biggest ipo this year. -- asia's second-biggest ipo this year. there was a default by one mdb in april. fei company is being investigated around the world for alleged money-laundering. db consistently denied wrongdoing. shares in virgin australia are searching at the open on the asx after the airline announced that china's would take a 30% stake. let's go to paul. what are the...

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the sense he does have a dark will have to do work to convince them otherwise. choice.'s always a people say it's a referendum on one candidate or another, but this reminds me of the gore and bush elections. not seem bush will qualified we will convince people he's not up to the job and they did not make progress on that score. i think the clinton people believe they can rende her unacceptable. she's got to prove she is likable enough. but a lot of this is about can trump get over the bar of being acceptable and the debates will be widely watched and hugely important. john: will he pay a price? he did not pay a price for some of the controversial things he said. will he pay the price in the general election? coming up, look back and a look forward to this dramatic 2016 race after this break. ♪ mark: welcome back. our next guest was with her before it was even trending. the chief strategist for the hillary clinton campaign, thank you for coming. 's name off ofump his candidacy. if he was able to significantly improve his standing, what kind of achievement with that the in the ann

the sense he does have a dark will have to do work to convince them otherwise. choice.'s always a people say it's a referendum on one candidate or another, but this reminds me of the gore and bush elections. not seem bush will qualified we will convince people he's not up to the job and they did not make progress on that score. i think the clinton people believe they can rende her unacceptable. she's got to prove she is likable enough. but a lot of this is about can trump get over the bar of...

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, the first since the 1980's. they have a plan for their economy to improve power supplies, economic manufacturers, and connections with the outside world. and the convicted drug lord joaquinel chapo -- lord guzman has been extradited to the united states. he escaped out of the original prison cell last year after tunneling two miles under the shower. this is bloomberg news. the latest trade in foreign exchange data in china points towards moves up, but the numbers are slightly positive at best. stephen engle's is here now with more. was lookingryone for stability and we've got it, sort of. it rose 4.4 percent. that is the second month in a row where it rose in you on -- rose in yuan terms. but a weaker currency helps exports in china be more competitive a broad but they are not really banking on a big boost against getting the economy out of the mud. the economy still faces great downward pressure. domestic demand continues to be weak and imports fell for an 18th consecutive month. the yuan was lower by nearly 11% in dollar terms. it has been down 11 out of the past 16 months in the

, the first since the 1980's. they have a plan for their economy to improve power supplies, economic manufacturers, and connections with the outside world. and the convicted drug lord joaquinel chapo -- lord guzman has been extradited to the united states. he escaped out of the original prison cell last year after tunneling two miles under the shower. this is bloomberg news. the latest trade in foreign exchange data in china points towards moves up, but the numbers are slightly positive at...

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to -- ryan 's dilemma to hug or not to hug. the gop presumptive nominee has a series of meetings scheduled, but focus will be trump's tete-a-tete with paul ryan, who held his support from chunks of art. the tension between the two top republicans has been toned down somewhat. a story by the new york times, trumpeted is defiant in an interview about the liturgy has walking into their meetings. in a pregame capitol hill press conference, ryan was more conciliatory, saying he wanted to find common ground with his party's presumptive nominee. speaker ryan: to pretend we are unifying without unifying, we are going at half strength. we need a real unification of our party. after a tough primary, that will take effort. we are committed to putting effort in. i want to be a part of the unifying process so that we are at full strength this fall so that we can win the election. this is a big tent party. there is plenty of room for policy disputes. we come from different wings of the party. the goal is to unify various wings around common principles. mark: obviously no matter how well the me

to -- ryan 's dilemma to hug or not to hug. the gop presumptive nominee has a series of meetings scheduled, but focus will be trump's tete-a-tete with paul ryan, who held his support from chunks of art. the tension between the two top republicans has been toned down somewhat. a story by the new york times, trumpeted is defiant in an interview about the liturgy has walking into their meetings. in a pregame capitol hill press conference, ryan was more conciliatory, saying he wanted to find...

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to touchscreens. ♪ emily: this is a special edition of "bloomberg west" live from m.i.t.'s 80 lab. we just heard from two of the leading minds in robotics research, but let's turn to the president for a big teacher look at entrepreneurship and innovation. we worked with m.i.t. to pull some numbers and found university teaches 63 courses on october ship, 172 members of its faculty members are serial entrepreneurs, meaning they have found in multiple startups, and over 30,000 active companies have been launched by m.i.t. alums and rating $1.9 trillion in annual revenue. joining us now is m.i.t.'s president, rafael reif. how do you see m.i.t.'s role in the startup community in boston and the world? rafael: m.i.t. is a very unique place. students with a great deal of not justme here because they want to get a degree but they want to do something important to make the world that are. they come here to learn and try to work on projects that address the most important challenges the world races. emily: you have a theory that we as a nation leave a lot of innovation on the table like catc

to touchscreens. ♪ emily: this is a special edition of "bloomberg west" live from m.i.t.'s 80 lab. we just heard from two of the leading minds in robotics research, but let's turn to the president for a big teacher look at entrepreneurship and innovation. we worked with m.i.t. to pull some numbers and found university teaches 63 courses on october ship, 172 members of its faculty members are serial entrepreneurs, meaning they have found in multiple startups, and over 30,000 active...

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more than 200 points. nine out of 10majors&p 500groups are lower and retailers taking center stage. joe: across the board today, retail is the big loser. in the green, ultra safe utility stocks. eking out a .24% increase. a notable selloff after yesterday. >> i want to hammer home what happened in retail. what happened here was investors yesterday,this etf then we got macy's numbers which are all. it killed most of the retailers today -- which were awful. macy's down, one of the worst performers in the s&p. staples the second worst performer. the big deal there is it will no longer get to acquire office depot. the question is literally how do they survive? everywhere you look those names got hammered. joe: people do not want retailers today but with they do want is government bonds. spain is going to launch a 50 year bond. for long-termer debt because it offers field. here's a look at spain's a 30 year yield. italy, they just sold one year debt at the lowest level at auction on record. another dissent into negative yield. which has a big super thursday tomorrow, 10 straight days of

more than 200 points. nine out of 10 major s&p 500 groups are lower and retailers taking center stage. joe: across the board today, retail is the big loser. in the green, ultra safe utility stocks. eking out a .24% increase. a notable selloff after yesterday. >> i want to hammer home what happened in retail. what happened here was investors yesterday,this etf then we got macy's numbers which are all. it killed most of the retailers today -- which were awful. macy's down, one of the...

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terms of the games we are seeing inthes&p 500.terms of what's driving -- driving them there, kevin, the big maker of generic pharmaceuticals be estimates and says that its generics pricing is actually not dragging down earnings that much, as are has been widespread concern about pricing of generic drugs and whether it would continue to decline. they said they didn't think they would see that much more downside. that is having a ripple effect. they also say they are going to complete their proposed acquisition of the allegan generic is this by the end of june, which could help those shares as well. then there is horizon pharmaceuticals. a specialty pharma company that has been beat up recently. shares have had a seven-day slide but you can see that they are rebounding today. earnings-per-share in sales beating estimates, saying that cash flow should improve through the balance of the rest of the year. in the past hour we heard from reuters that there was a nondisclosure agreement on a potential bid for the company. a lot going on. david: what about other assets, movement there? yes.

terms of the games we are seeing in the s&p 500. terms of what's driving -- driving them there, kevin, the big maker of generic pharmaceuticals be estimates and says that its generics pricing is actually not dragging down earnings that much, as are has been widespread concern about pricing of generic drugs and whether it would continue to decline. they said they didn't think they would see that much more downside. that is having a ripple effect. they also say they are going to complete...

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newsroom. here?s symbolism al hunt: it is a train that left the station. mark: karen, did you look at that as significant? from: we are hearing it him and other republicans, "i will support the nominee." it is like he who are not be named. who will not be named. they will have some weeks to get used to the idea and try it on with donald trump as the standardbearer. eventse had this turn of between tuesday and thursday and, for a lot of them, it has hit quickly and they have not gotten their heads around it. last week, donald trump start to put together his self funding and he was going to raise money and there would be super pac money. the question was, "who is going to do this?" you have a billionaire who says he will raise money for trump. will he be able to make the nut? or, will this be the biggest obstacle? al hunt: it will be a hurdle. he will make most of it. i hate to correct john heilemann. donald trump did not change a little. it was a massive overhaul and he said that the rich would pay more. 35% of his tax cuts go to the top 1%. now, in a $4 trillion change, he says they will n

newsroom. here?s symbolism al hunt: it is a train that left the station. mark: karen, did you look at that as significant? from: we are hearing it him and other republicans, "i will support the nominee." it is like he who are not be named. who will not be named. they will have some weeks to get used to the idea and try it on with donald trump as the standardbearer. eventse had this turn of between tuesday and thursday and, for a lot of them, it has hit quickly and they have not...

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right now. pauline: he has been groomed to since the 1990's. he's getting older. it is a big problem. rishaad: will these companies have this huge shakeout taking place. pauline: it will be one funeral at a time. it ensures the workers are compensated. i cannot see this present moment the concern over employment that there would be a broad overhaul. china has 1.5 billion employees. rishaad: up, thousands people are protesting in vietnam demanding better protection of its beaches. more on that coming up next. ♪ rishaad: there's no lack of transparency and that is what people of been criticized for. inprotests over the weekend vietnam. a very rare thing for vietnam. a lot of analysts saying this is the first big test that the government is facing. we are talking about four provinces being affected by this. we've had some 200 kilometers stretches of essential vietnamese beaches. fish wash uparm dead. the government says it doesn't know how came to be there. environmental damage has here in the fisheries industry. sunday's protests took place in hanoi and ho chi minh city. there is no

right now. pauline: he has been groomed to since the 1990's. he's getting older. it is a big problem. rishaad: will these companies have this huge shakeout taking place. pauline: it will be one funeral at a time. it ensures the workers are compensated. i cannot see this present moment the concern over employment that there would be a broad overhaul. china has 1.5 billion employees. rishaad: up, thousands people are protesting in vietnam demanding better protection of its beaches. more on that...

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london, evans.'s the most interesting economist out of pittsburgh. straight talking is always unpredictable. at arancine lacqua is panel in london. extremely well-timed. right now, extremely well-timed, a discussion on oil. on saturday, we saw the changing of the minister of oil. when you saw the shock and awe, were you surprised? >> i was not surprised. he had been the head of oil for 21 years. he had been retired for a time. i remember him mentioning to me that he wanted to retire a few years back and spend time with his grandchildren. he was joking saying that now the grandchildren are teenagers and don't want time with their grandfather. it was not a surprise, per se be been in thead making for a while. domestic dynamics of this new machine, this change . what does it mean for the price of oil? do you assume it means lower for longer? >> i think what we will see is saudi arabia will double down on the strategy or market share. i think, in general, it's suggest that global prices may be with us for more time. vonnie: we have had a run-up in prices with the alberta fires. th

london, evans.'s the most interesting economist out of pittsburgh. straight talking is always unpredictable. at arancine lacqua is panel in london. extremely well-timed. right now, extremely well-timed, a discussion on oil. on saturday, we saw the changing of the minister of oil. when you saw the shock and awe, were you surprised? >> i was not surprised. he had been the head of oil for 21 years. he had been retired for a time. i remember him mentioning to me that he wanted to retire a...

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market not playing ball. happen --s is not they are trading at lower levels since it was extended in 2014. not a lot for stock growth. and the yen going in the wrong direction. a lot of this has been the weaker dollar story that is driving the safe haven demand for the japanese currency. certainly, this goes into my last chart mileages exports declining. -- my last chart, which is exports decline. we are also looking at bank lending slowing as well. for some time, we saw a surge in corporate yields, but that is starting to diverge. angie: thank you. we are looking forward to the afternoon's business in tokyo, where we see speculation that japan will be keeping its sales tax delayed. we will get the latest from the reopening, after the break. ♪ show me top new artist. ah, ha ha. show me top male artist. my whole belieber fan group. it's not a competition, but if it was i won. xfinity x1 lets you access the greatest library of billboard music awards moments, simply by using your voice. the billboard music awards, live sunday may 22nd, 8/5 pacific, only on abc. angie: top stories,

market not playing ball. happen --s is not they are trading at lower levels since it was extended in 2014. not a lot for stock growth. and the yen going in the wrong direction. a lot of this has been the weaker dollar story that is driving the safe haven demand for the japanese currency. certainly, this goes into my last chart mileages exports declining. -- my last chart, which is exports decline. we are also looking at bank lending slowing as well. for some time, we saw a surge in corporate...

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is officially in campaign mode, entering its longest campaign since the 1960's. voters will go to the polls on july 2 after malcolm turnbull called an election seven months after seizing power in a liberal party coup. the former investment banker is looking to stamp his authority on the leadership in a cycle, which has seen australia churned through six prime ministers in a few years. the new rba governor won't have long to settle in. inwill succeed glenn stevens september, and jpmorgan says he may have to cut rates to 1% or less in his first three months after the rba admitted it will miss the bottom of its core inflation target this year. the commonwealth bank of australia has declared on unaudited third quarter cash profit of 2.3 billion aussie dollars. that is $1.7 billion. the bank joined its competitors in reporting higher changes -- charges for bad or doubtful debt. the debt charges rose to 427 million aussie dollars from 256 million a year earlier. hasgreek government says it enough support among lawmakers to approve pension and income 6.2reforms as part of a billion dollar pa

is officially in campaign mode, entering its longest campaign since the 1960's. voters will go to the polls on july 2 after malcolm turnbull called an election seven months after seizing power in a liberal party coup. the former investment banker is looking to stamp his authority on the leadership in a cycle, which has seen australia churned through six prime ministers in a few years. the new rba governor won't have long to settle in. inwill succeed glenn stevens september, and jpmorgan says...